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Conciliato­ry gestures, but little sign of end to US-China row

- Reuters Washington

The US and China are making conciliato­ry gestures ahead of trade talks, but they are showing no signs of progress toward ending a tariff war that threatens global economic growth.

Beijing is offering to narrow its trade surplus with the US by purchasing more American exports. But Chinese leaders are resisting pressure to roll back technology plans that their trading partners say violate Beijing’s free-trade commitment­s and hurt foreign competitor­s.

Ahead of the 13th round of talks in Washington in early October, President Donald Trump postponed a planned tariff hike on Chinese goods. Beijing lifted punitive duties on soybeans in a move that helps both American farmers and Chinese pig breeders who need soy as feed and are under economic pressure amid a devastatin­g outbreak of African swine fever. Those gestures helped reassure jittery financial markets.

But economists say that while some temporary agreements in the sprawling dispute over technology and trade might be possible, they don’t expect a final settlement this year.

Trump has accused Beijing of dragging out talks in hopes he will be defeated in his re-election bid next year and his successor might agree to more favorable terms. Private sector analysts say that is unlikely. But they say Beijing might be hoping Trump will feel pressure to compromise to reinforce his self-proclaimed status as a deal-maker.

The tariffs Trump first imposed on Chinese imports last year largely spared American consumers by focusing on industrial goods. But the latest rounds — Sept. 1 and Dec. 15 — hit household goods such as smartphone­s and baseballs.

“Being tough on China is popular as long as that doesn’t mean you pay more for stuff,” said Nathan Sheets, chief economist at PGIM Fixed Income and former undersecre­tary of the treasury for internatio­nal affairs.

A look at the trade war and its impact:

HOW IT STARTED

Trump slapped 25 percent tariffs on $50 billion of Chinese imports last year. Beijing retaliated with similar penalties. In a spiral of tit-for-tat increases, the US has raised duties — or announced plans to do so — on $550 billion of Chinese goods, or almost everything Americans buy from China. Beijing has raised duties on $120 billion of American goods. China is running out of imports for retaliatio­n because of the lopsided trade balance.

WHAT THE DISPUTE IS ABOUT

The Trump administra­tion wants Beijing to roll back plans for government-led creation of global competitor­s in robotics and other technology fields. Europe, Japan and other trading partners object to Trump’s tactics, which also have been used against them, but echo US complaints that Beijing’s plans violate its market-opening commitment­s. They say China’s industry developmen­t is based on stealing or pressuring companies to hand over technology and violating its trade agreements by subsidizin­g and shielding its fledgling companies from competitio­n. Chinese leaders are reluctant to give up developmen­t strategies they see as a path to prosperity and global influence.

WHY IT MATTERS

The war has battered American and Chinese farmers and factories and sent shockwaves through global industries. Chinese data show trade with the US fell 13.9 percent from a year earlier in the first eight months of 2019. That has disrupted industrial supply chains that stretch around the world, depressing demand for processor chips and other industrial components from Japan, South Korea, Europe and other suppliers. Companies and investors worry global economic growth, which already shows signs of cooling, could fall into recession.

STATUS OF NEGOTIATIO­NS

A sticking point is how to enforce any agreement. China insists Trump’s tariff increases must be lifted as soon as a deal takes effect. Washington says at least some must stay in place to guarantee Beijing carries out its promises. Talks broke down in May over that issue, and there is no indication either side has offered concession­s to break that deadlock.

 ?? AP ?? US-China talks are unlikley to end the trade dispute, analysts say.
AP US-China talks are unlikley to end the trade dispute, analysts say.

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